Antisemitic incidents surge across Europe, ADL report shows

According to a report published on Wednesday, by the US based Anti-Defamation league (ADL), violent anti-Semitic incidents have risen across the seven countries of the largest Jewish communities outside of Israel.
These countries, also known as the J7, are Germany, France, the United Kingdom, Canada, the United States, Australia and Argentina.
The report publication coincides with the 80th anniversary of the end of the Second World War.
The J7 Task Force, which was established in July 2023, has sounded the alarm about the intensifying attacks on Jewish communities, especially since the October 7 2023 attack by Hamas.
The report states that attacks on Jewish schools, synagogues and businesses alongside individuals, have increased significantly, in some cases more than doubling in the year 2023, compared to the previous year.
In Germany, anti-Semitic incidents increased 75% from 2021 to 2023, 185% in France and 82% in the UK.
International President of ADL, Marina Rosenberg, says that because people are being harassed just for being Jewish, “many Jews around the world are hiding their Jewish symbols.”
She says that some Jews are even going as far as changing their names to sound less Jewish on ride-sharing apps and hiding symbols such as the Star of David.
Political extremes fuel violence
Antisemitism has continued to rise in Germany across both political extremes. Violence fuelled by Alternative for Germany (AfD) rhetoric has increased, as well as attacks from Muslims and even the centre of society, who support freedom for Palestine.
According to the report, the continuing rise of the AfD “poses a major challenge. The AfD provides an environment for anti-Semites to flourish. It has close links to right-wing extremist circles, for whom it acts as the political arm in parliament. It is also a threat to Jewish religious life,” the report states.
The perpetrators of the attacks are not just limited to the far-right or far-left.
“We’ve been seeing a normalisation of anti-Semitism in societies across the political spectrum. So it’s not only an issue of far-right or far-left or from Islamists or jihadists it’s all over our societies. And therefore, what is required, not just here in Germany, but around the world, is a whole of society approach,” Rosenberg tells Euronews.
Last year, students across Europe took part in intense pro-Palestinian protests at universities, that in some cases resulted in violence and the arrest of students. In one case, three EU students were threatened with deportation from Germany following a sit-in at a Berlin university, where the building was heavily vandalised, and members of staff allegedly threatened.
Rosenberg says civil society and universities need to do more to do more to combat anti-Semitism.
Anti-Semitism and democracy
“The threat of anti-Semitism is not just against Jews. It’s against all of society. And it really goes against any democratic values that our liberal societies believe in. We’ve always said that the anti-Semitism is the canary in the coal mine. And what starts with the Jews never ends with the Jews. And we know this here in Germany, and we know it in Europe and we know it around the world,” Rosenberg adds.
The attacks are not just limited to harassment and vandalism, but also physical assaults and violence.
The J7 report states that police statistics show 3,200 crimes motivated by antisemitism between January 1 2024 and October 7 2024 in Germany. This would be a decrease from 2023, but the report also stipulates that RIAS, the civil society reporting office for anti-Semitic incidents (including criminal offenses and non-criminal acts) recorded almost 3,000 anti-Semitic incidents the previous year, between October 7 2023 and end of 2023.
Additionally, RIAS also reported that 1,383 anti-Semitic incidents had already been recorded during the first half of 2024, which was the highest number in any previous year. 21 of these incidents involved Jewish memorial sites.
“When somebody is silent, when they’re seeing Jews harassed in the street, they need to understand not only that morally, it’s their obligation to do something, but that they might be next. If it’s immigrants or women or LGBTQ plus, et cetera, when liberal societies fail to protect their minorities, they’re failing to protect the democratic values,” Rosenberg tells Euronews.
Source: Euro News













